One of the best-known women in the field of geographic education is Emma Hart Willard, who was also an innovative geographer
and cartographer. The sixteenth of seventeen children in her family, she was a precocious child who, when hardly out of her
teens, became the head of Middlebury Female Academy, a boarding school for girls. In 1821 the school relocated to Troy, New
York, and was renamed the Troy Female Seminary. The curriculum taught by Mrs. Willard used maps for lessons in both history
and geography. Dissatisfied with the textbooks of the period, she wrote her own, illustrated by one of her students, Elizabeth
Sherrill. Willard also collaborated with William Channing Woodbridge in A System of Universal Geography on the Principles of Comparison and Clarification (Hartford: Oliver D. Cooke & Co, 1824; 2nd ed., 1827, G1019 .W715 1827), a text that revolutionized the study of geography.
Many of her students themselves became geography educators, further disseminating her ideas and influence.

A series of maps to Willard's History of the United States, or, Republic of America. Designed for schools and private libaries. New York, White, Gallaher, & White, 1828.full item

Willard was one of the first geographers to show on maps accurate information pertaining to the distribution and migration
of Native Americans in the eastern United States. Rather than using the European concept of boundaries, she recognized and
illustrated the mobility of tribes across large geographic areas, acknowledging Native American concepts of space. Her maps
also reflect the loose affiliation between independent groups of Native Americans. The Library has many examples of her pioneering
work, such as Locations and Wanderings of the Aboriginal Tribes from A Series of Maps to Willard's History of the United States (New York: White, Gallaher and White, 1828; G1201.S1 W52 1839 Vault).17 Clearly women have long played a major role in the discipline of geography, paving the way for the recent work of feminist
geographers.